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   alt.politics.economics      "Its the economy, stupid"      345,374 messages   

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   Message 344,683 of 345,374   
   Engineering dependency to All   
   Re: Dow drops over 500 points as hot inf   
   14 Feb 24 19:51:27   
   
   XPost: alt.politics.trump, talk.politics.guns, talk.politics.misc   
   XPost: alt.society.liberalism   
   From: blue-disasters@jan6.org   
      
   On 25 May 2023, Lou Bricano  posted some   
   news:vMRbM.56447$i7t3.18970@fx08.iad:   
      
   > So much for the Biden / Democrat ruined economy.  Trump had things   
   > smoking hot and everyone making money.  The stupid Democrats come   
   > along and totally fuck everything up.   
      
   Hotter-than-anticipated inflation has dampened hopes for a quick Fed   
   policy pivot.   
      
   The Dow Jones lost well over 700 points at one point, while the S&P 500   
   fell below the 5,000 threshold.   
      
   Odds of a rate cut in May dropped to 35% from 64%.   
      
   US stocks sank from all-time highs as January's inflation data came in   
   hotter than anticipated, disappointing hopes for a pivot in monetary   
   policy.   
      
   The latest consumer price index climbed 0.3% month-over-month and 3.1%   
   from a year prior, ahead of expectations for a 0.2% and 2.9% increase,   
   respectively.   
      
   Core CPI saw its largest jump in eight months, gaining 0.4% for the   
   month and 3.9% on an annual basis. The measure excludes food and energy   
   components, and was expected to rise 0.3% month-over-month and 3.7%   
   year-over-year.   
      
   The gauge is preferred by Federal Reserve officials, who previously   
   cautioned markets that more evidence of falling inflation is needed   
   before interest rates are cut. Instead, the CPI provided investors with   
   a wake-up call to the possibility of higher-for-longer monetary policy.   
      
   "A market that forcefully expected earlier easing — fortified by a   
   series of rate cuts throughout the year — has had to digest not just a   
   barrage of consistent Fedspeak, but the stark reality that the Fed can   
   still not declare victory on its long campaign to quell inflation," LPL   
   Financial chief global strategist Quincy Krosby said. "Even though rate   
   cuts will probably begin in 2024, it's not if but when, the last mile is   
   getting longer."   
      
   No US index was spared, with the Dow Jones hemorrhaging over 700 points   
   at one point on Tuesday, its biggest drop in nearly a year. The S&P 500   
   fell back below the 5,000 threshold.   
      
   Odds of a rate cut in May declined to 35%, with investors indicating a   
   64% chance before the inflation report.   
      
   The inflation data sent Treasury yields up, with the 10-year rate   
   spiking over 14 basis points to 4.316%. The rate of the policy-sensitive   
   two-year bond hit its highest level since before December.   
      
   "The CPI data has disrupted the string of Goldilocks growth and   
   inflation data that had helped to lift the S&P 500 over 5,000," Brian   
   Rose, senior US economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, said. But it   
   doesn't change our positive fundamental outlook for 2024 of solid   
   growth, further disinflation, and the start of Fed rate cuts in Q2 that   
   is supportive of risk assets."   
      
   Here's where US indexes stood at the 4:00 p.m. closing bell on Tuesday:   
      
   S&P 500: 4,953.18, down 1.37%   
      
   Dow Jones Industrial Average: 38,272.39, down 1.35% (-524.99 points)   
      
   Nasdaq Composite: 15,655.60, down 1.80%   
      
   Here's what else happened today:   
      
   Markets could be overreacting to the hot inflation report, analysts   
   suggest.   
      
   Nvidia has grown to the fourth largest US company, eclipsing Amazon.   
      
   Investors are the most bullish in 2 years on tech rally, Bank of America   
   says.   
      
   Peak oil demand is far out, as India and China continue buying, OPEC   
   chief says.   
      
   Half of tankers sanctioned for Russian crude cargo are now idle.   
      
   The S&P 500 has 30% more upside through the end of 2025, Capital   
   Economics says.   
      
   In commodities, bonds, and crypto:   
      
   West Texas Intermediate crude oil climbed 1.05% to $77.74 a barrel.   
   Brent crude, the international benchmark, increased 0.73% to $82.60 a   
   barrel.   
      
   Gold dropped 1.33% to $2,006.00 per ounce.   
      
   The 10-year Treasury yield rose 14 basis points to 4.316%.   
      
   Bitcoin fell 1.29% to $49,420.33.   
      
   https://www.businessinsider.com/stock-market-news-today-hot-inflation-cpi   
   -data-federal-reserve-2024-2   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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